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1.
Force responses to transcranial magnetic stimulation of motor cortex (TMS) during exercise provide information about voluntary activation and contractile properties of the muscle. Here, TMS-generated twitches and muscle relaxation during the TMS-evoked silent period were measured in fresh, heated, and fatigued muscle. Subjects performed isometric contractions of elbow flexors in two studies. Torque and EMG were recorded from elbow flexor and extensor muscles. One study (n = 6) measured muscle contraction times and relaxation rates during brief maximal and submaximal contractions in fresh and fatigued muscle. Another study (n = 7) aimed to 1) assess the reproducibility of muscle contractile properties during brief voluntary contractions in fresh muscle, 2) validate the technique for contractile properties in passively heated muscle, and 3) apply the technique to study contractile properties during sustained maximal voluntary contractions. In both studies, muscle contractile properties during voluntary contractions were compared with the resting twitch evoked by motor nerve stimulation. Measurement of muscle contractile properties during voluntary contractions is reproducible in fresh muscle and reveals faster and slower muscle relaxation rates in heated and fatigued muscle, respectively. The technique is more sensitive to altered muscle state than the traditional motor nerve resting twitch. Use of TMS during sustained maximal contractions reveals slowing of muscle contraction and relaxation with different time courses and a decline in voluntary activation. Voluntary output from the motor cortex becomes insufficient to maintain complete activation of muscle, although slowing of muscle contraction and relaxation indicates that lower motor unit firing rates are required for fusion of force.  相似文献   

2.
The purpose of this review is to examine the literature that has investigated the potential relationship between mechanomyographic (MMG) frequency and motor unit firing rates. Several different experimental designs/methodologies have been used to address this issue, including: repetitive electrical stimulation, voluntary muscle actions in muscles with different fiber type compositions, fatiguing and non-fatiguing isometric or dynamic muscle actions, and voluntary muscle actions in young versus elderly subjects and healthy individuals versus subjects with a neuromuscular disease(s). Generally speaking, the results from these investigations have suggested that MMG frequency is related to the rate of motor unit activation and the contractile properties (contraction and relaxation times) of the muscle fibers. Other studies, however, have reported that MMG mean power frequency (MPF) does not always follow the expected pattern of firing rate modulation (e.g. motor unit firing rates generally increase with torque during isometric muscle actions, but MMG MPF may remain stable or even decrease). In addition, there are several factors that may affect the frequency content of the MMG signal during a voluntary muscle action (i.e. muscle stiffness, intramuscular fluid pressure, etc.), independent of changes in motor unit firing rates. Despite the potential influences of these factors, most of the evidence has suggested that the frequency domain of the MMG signal contains some information regarding motor unit firing rates. It is likely, however, that this information is qualitative, rather than quantitative in nature, and reflects the global motor unit firing rate, rather than the firing rates of a particular group of motor units.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of aging on motoneuron firing rates and muscle contractile properties were studied in tibialis anterior muscle by comparing results from six young (20.8 +/- 0.8 yr) and six old men (82.0 +/- 1.7 yr). For each subject, data were collected from repeated tests over a 2-wk period. Contractile tests included maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) with twitch interpolation and stimulated twitch contractions. The old men had 26% lower MVC torque (P < 0.01) than did the young men, but percent activation was not different (99.1 and 99.3%, respectively). Twitch contraction durations were 23% longer (P < 0.01) in the old compared with the young men. During a series of repeated brief steady-state contractions at 10, 25, 50, 75, and 100% MVC, motor unit firing rates were recorded. Results from approximately 950 motor unit trains in each subject group indicated that at all relative torque levels mean firing rates were 30-35% lower (P < 0.01) in the old subjects. Comparisons between young and old subjects' mean firing rates at each of 10%, 50%, and MVC torques and their corresponding mean twitch contraction duration yielded a range of moderate-to-high correlations (r = -0.67 to -0.84). That lower firing rates were matched to longer twitch contraction durations in the muscle of old men, and relatively higher firing rates were matched with shorter contraction times from the young men, indirectly supports the neuromuscular age-related remodeling principle.  相似文献   

4.
A comparison was carried out between the motor unit (MU) firing rate and the characteristics of the twitch and the fibre type composition of anconeus and triceps brachii. Fibre type composition (type I, type II) was determined in whole cross-sections of cadaver specimens. The proportion of type I fibre was 60%-67% in anconeus and 32-40% in the lateral head of triceps brachii. Reflecting these histochemical differences, the contraction time of anconeus and triceps was 92 +/- 9 ms and 68 +/- 9 ms respectively. It follows that anconeus can be classified as a slow muscle, as opposed to the lateral head of triceps. The relationship between MU firing rate and isometric force, tested at 90 degrees elbow flexion, differed between the two muscles for force values below 30% of maximal voluntary contraction. No significant increase in MU firing rate was found in anconeus at forces above 5% of maximal voluntary contraction. It is concluded that even within a single agonistic muscle group acting at a single joint there is an adaptation of MU firing rate to the contractile characteristics of each muscle.  相似文献   

5.
The H-reflex was evoked after producing regular unit firing in the flexor carpi ulnaris set up by moderate voluntary isometric muscular contraction. The firing index was used to quantify the effectiveness of the monosynaptic afferent signal traveling to the firing motoneuron. An analysis was made of the 3.3–16.0 spikes/sec firing range characteristic of naturally occurring muscular contraction. Effectiveness of afferent signals for motor units in the "fast" muscles under study were found to depend on motoneuronal background firing rate; the former declined as the latter rose, as previously discovered during research into "slow" soleus muscle units [2]. Afferent signals were most effective for motoneurons belonging to the "fast" muscles over the entire range of firing rates. It was found from analyzing afferent signal efficacy in relation to its point of occurrence within the interspike interval that variations in motoneuronal excitability within this interval are the reason for this relationship.Institute for Research into Information Transmission, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 19, No. 5, pp. 595–600, September–October, 1987.  相似文献   

6.
Breathing is a complex act requiring the coordinated activity of multiple groups of muscles. Thoracic and abdominal respiratory muscles expand and contract the lungs, whereas pharyngeal and laryngeal respiratory muscles maintain upper airway patency and regulate upper airway resistance. An appreciation of the importance of the latter muscle group in maintaining ventilatory homeostasis and in the pathophysiology of sleep apnea has led to extensive studies examining the neural regulation of pharyngeal dilator muscles. The present review examines the role of heterogeneity in motoneuron and muscle properties in determining the diversity in the electrical and mechanical behaviors of thoracic compared with pharyngeal muscle groups. Specifically, phrenic and hypoglossal motoneuron electrophysiological properties influence whether and the extent to which these neurons will fire in response to a given synaptic input arising from chemo- and mechanoreceptors and from respiratory and nonrespiratory pattern generators. Furthermore, thoracic and pharyngeal muscle properties determine the mechanical response to motoneuronal activity, including the speed of contraction, relationships between motoneuron firing frequency and force production, and whether force is maintained during repetitive activation. Heterogeneity in the functional capabilities of these motoneurons and muscles is in turn determined by diversity of their structural and biochemical properties. Thus, intrinsic properties of respiratory motoneurons and muscles act in concert with neuronal drives in defining the complex electrical and mechanical behavior of pharyngeal and thoracic respiratory motor systems.  相似文献   

7.
The relative roles of motor unit firing rate modulation and recruitment were evaluated when individuals with cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) and able-bodied controls performed a brief (6 s), 50% maximal voluntary contraction (50% MVC; target contraction) of triceps brachii every 10 s until it required maximal effort to achieve the target force. Mean (+/-SD) endurance times for SCI and control subjects were 34+/-26 and 15+/-5 min, respectively, at which point significant reductions in maximal triceps force had occurred. Twitch occlusion analysis in controls indicated that force declines resulted largely from peripheral contractile failure. In SCI subjects, triceps surface EMG and motor unit potential amplitude declined in parallel suggesting failure at axon branch points and/or alterations in muscle membrane properties. The force of low threshold units, measured by spike-triggered averaging, declined in SCI but not control subjects, suggesting that higher threshold units fatigued in controls. Central fatigue was also obvious after SCI. Mean (+/-SD) MVC motor unit firing rates declined significantly with fatigue for control (24.6+/-7.1 to 17.3+/-5.1Hz), but not SCI subjects (25.9+/-12.7 to 20.1+/-9.7Hz). Unit firing rates were unchanged during target contractions for each subject group, but with the MVC rate decreases, units of SCI and control subjects were activated intensely at endurance time (88% and 99% MVC rates, respectively). New unit recruitment also maintained the target contractions although it was limited after SCI because many descending inputs to triceps motoneurons were disrupted. This resulted in sparse EMG, even during MVCs, but allowed the same unit to be recorded throughout. These EMG data showed that both unit recruitment and rate modulation were important for maintaining force during repeated submaximal intermittent contractions of triceps brachii muscles performed by SCI subjects. Similar results were found for control subjects. Muscles weakened by SCI may therefore provide a useful model in which to directly study motor unit rate modulation and recruitment during weak or strong voluntary contractions.  相似文献   

8.
Firing rates of motor units and surface EMG were measured from the triceps brachii muscles of able-bodied subjects during brief submaximal and maximal isometric voluntary contractions made at 5 elbow joint angles that covered the entire physiological range of muscle lengths. Muscle activation at the longest, midlength, and shortest muscle lengths, measured by twitch occlusion, averaged 98%, 97%, and 93% respectively, with each subject able to achieve complete activation during some contractions. As expected, the strongest contractions were recorded at 90 degrees of elbow flexion. Mean motor unit firing rates and surface EMG increased with contraction intensity at each muscle length. For any given absolute contraction intensity, motor unit firing rates varied when muscle length was changed. However, mean motor unit firing rates were independent of muscle length when contractions were compared with the intensity of the maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) achieved at each joint angle.  相似文献   

9.
Stimulation trains that exploit the catchlike property [catchlike-inducing trains (CITs)] produce greater forces and rates of rise of force than do constant-frequency trains (CFTs) during isometric contractions and isovelocity movements. This study examined the effect of CITs during isotonic contractions in healthy subjects. Knee extension was electrically elicited against a load of 10% of maximum voluntary isometric contraction. The stimulation intensity was set to produce 20% of maximum voluntary isometric contraction. The muscle was tested before and after fatigue with a 6-pulse CFT and 6-pulse CITs that contained an initial doublet, triplet, or quadruplet. For prefatigue responses, the greatest isotonic performance was produced by CITs with initial doublets. When the muscles were fatigued, triplet CITs were best. CITs produce greater excursion, work, peak power, and average power than do CFTs, because CITs produced more rapid rates of rise of force. Faster rates of rise of force enabled the preload on the muscle to be exceeded earlier during the stimulation train.  相似文献   

10.
The following two hypotheses regarding diaphragm contractile properties in the perinatal rat were tested. First, there is a major transformation of contractile and fatigue properties during the period between the inception of inspiratory drive transmission in utero and birth. Second, the diaphragm muscle properties develop to functionally match changes occurring in phrenic motoneuron electrophysiological properties. Muscle force recordings and intracellular recordings of end-plate potentials were measured by using phrenic nerve-diaphragm muscle in vitro preparations isolated from rats on embryonic day 18 and postnatal days 0-1. The following age-dependent changes occurred: 1) twitch contraction and half relaxation times decreased approximately two- and threefold, respectively; 2) the tetanic force levels increased approximately fivefold; 3) the ratio of peak twitch force to maximum tetanic force decreased 2.3-fold; 4) the range of forces generated by the diaphragm in response to graded nerve stimulation increased approximately twofold; 5) the force-frequency curve was shifted to the right; and 6) the propensity for neuromuscular transmission failure decreased. In conclusion, the diaphragm contractile and phrenic motoneuron repetitive firing properties develop in concert so that the full range of potential diaphragm force recruitment can be utilized and problems associated with diaphragm fatigue are minimized.  相似文献   

11.
We studied the effect of caffeine on voluntary and electrically stimulated contractions of the adductor pollicis muscle in five adult volunteers. Caffeine (500 mg) was administered orally in a double-blind fashion. Electrical stimulation of the ulnar nerve was performed at 10, 20, 30, 50, and 100 Hz before and after a sustained voluntary contraction held at 50% of the maximal voluntary contraction (MVC). A brief tetanus at 30 Hz was also performed to calculate relaxation rate in the fresh muscle. Contractile properties, relaxation rate, and endurance were then assessed after caffeine and placebo, as well as the response of the fatigued muscle to different frequencies of stimulation. There was no difference in the maximal tension obtained with electrical stimulation (T100) or in the MVC between placebo and caffeine. The tensions developed with electrical stimulation at lower frequencies increased significantly with caffeine ingestion, shifting the frequency-force curve to the left, both before and after fatigue. Mean plasma caffeine concentration associated with these responses was 12.2 +/- 4.9 mg/l. We conclude that caffeine has a direct effect on skeletal muscle contractile properties both before and after fatigue as demonstrated by electrical stimulation.  相似文献   

12.
This study was designed to investigate the local effect of experimental muscle pain on the MMG and the surface EMG during a range of sub-maximal isometric contractions. Muscle pain was induced by injections of hypertonic saline into the biceps brachii muscle in 12 subjects. Injections of isotonic saline served as a control. Pain intensity and location, MMG and surface EMG from the biceps brachii were assessed during static isometric (0%, 10%, 30%, 50% and, 70% of the maximal voluntary contraction) and ramp isometric (0-50% of the maximal voluntary contraction) elbow flexions. MMG and surface EMG signals were analyzed in the time and frequency domain. Experimentally induced muscle pain induced an increase in root mean square values of the MMG signal while no changes were observed in the surface EMG. Most likely this increase reflects changes in the mechanical contractile properties of the muscle and indicates compensatory mechanisms, i.e. decreased firing rate and increased twitch force to maintain a constant force output in presence of experimental muscle pain. Under well-controlled conditions, MMG recordings may be more sensitive than surface EMG recordings and clinically useful for detecting non-invasively increased muscle mechanical contributions during muscle pain conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Recurrent inhibition between tonically activated single human motoneurons was studied experimentally and by means of a computer simulation. Motor unit activity was recorded during weak isometric constant-force muscle contractions of brachial biceps (BB) and soleus (SOL) muscles. Three techniques (cross correlogram, frequencygram, and interspike interval analysis) were used to gauge the relations between single motor unit potential trains. Pure inhibition was detected in 5.6% of 54 BB motoneuron pairs and in 5.2% of 43 SOL motoneuron pairs. In 27.8% (BB) and 23.7% (SOL) presumed inhibition symptoms were accompanied by a synchrony peak; 37% (BB) and 48.8% (SOL) exhibited synchrony alone. The demonstrated inhibition was very weak, at the edge of detectability. Computer simulations were based on the threshold-crossing model of a tonically firing motoneuron. The model included synaptic noise as well as threshold and postsynaptic potential (PSP) amplitude change within interspike interval. Inhibition efficiency of the model neurons increased with IPSP amplitude and duration, and with increasing source firing rate. The efficiency depended on target motoneuron interspike interval in a manner similar to standard deviation of ISI. The minimum detectable amplitude estimated in the simulations was about 50V, which, compared with the experimental results, suggests that amplitudes of detectable recurrent IPSPs in human motoneurons during weak muscle contractions do not exceed this magnitude. Since recurrent inhibition is known to be progressively depressed with an increase in the force of voluntary contraction, it is concluded that the recurrent inhibition hardly plays any important role in the isometric muscle contractions of constant force.  相似文献   

14.
Muscle activity was recorded from the flexor carpi radialis muscle during static and dynamic-concentric wrist flexion in six subjects, who had exhibited large differences in histochemically identified muscle fibre composition. Motor unit recruitment patterns were identified by sampling 310 motor units and counting firing rates in pulses per second (pps). During concentric wrist flexion at 30% of maximal exercise intensity the mean firing rate was 27 (SD 13) pps. This was around twice the value of 12 (SD 5) pps recorded during sustained static contraction at 30% of maximal voluntary contraction, despite a larger absolute force level during the static contraction. A similar pattern of higher firing rates during dynamic exercise was seen when concentric wrist flexion at 60% of maximal exercise intensity [30 (SD 14) pps] was compared with sustained static contraction at 60% of maximal voluntary contraction [19 (SD 8) pps]. The increase in dynamic exercise intensity was accomplished by recruitment of additional motor units rather than by increasing the firing rate as during static contractions. No difference in mean firing rates was found among subjects with different muscle fibre composition, who had previously exhibited marked differences in metabolic response during corresponding dynamic contractions. It was concluded that during submaximal dynamic contractions motor unit firing rate cannot be deduced from observations during static contractions and that muscle fibre composition may play a minor role. Accepted: 5 May 1998  相似文献   

15.
The recruitment and firing rate of biceps brachii (BB) and brachioradialis (BR) motor units (MUs) were studied in the course of fatiguing isometric contractions at 20%-30% of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC). MU recruitment generally occurred throughout the maintained contraction and was similar for BB and BR muscles. Newly recruited MUs started to discharge in the form of bursts, the duration of which increased until a continuous rhythmical firing was achieved. Within each burst, the first interval between two consecutive discharges was usually the shortest. MU threshold was lowered just after the limit time of the maintained contraction. The MU's firing rate either increased or remained stable as a function of the elapsed time. It is concluded that (1) in fatiguing isometric contractions at 20%-30% MVC contractile failure is mainly compensated for by MU recruitment and a lowered MU threshold and (2) differences between in surface changes in the electromyogram of BB and BR muscles cannot easily be explained by related differences in MU firing rate and recruitment.  相似文献   

16.
Persistent leg motoneurons of the moth Manduca sexta were investigated in larval and adult animals to compare their dendritic structures, intrinsic electrical properties and pattern of target innervation. The study focused on two identified motoneurons of the prothoracic leg. Despite the complete remodeling of leg muscles, the motoneurons innervated pretarsal flexor muscles in both larval and adult legs. Similarly, although the central dendrites regress and regrow, the branching pattern was similar with the exception of a prominent midline branch that was not present in the adult stage. The intrinsic electrical properties of the motoneurons differed between larval and adult stages. Larval motoneurons had significantly higher membrane input resistances and more depolarized resting membrane potentials than did motoneurons in pharate adults or adults. In all stages, one motoneuron had a low maximal firing frequency, whereas the second motoneuron, which innervated the other half of the muscle, had a high maximum firing frequency. Although the two motoneurons continued to innervate the same halves of the target muscle, their relative effects on muscular contraction were reversed during metamorphosis along with concomitant changes in intrinsic properties. Pretarsal flexor motoneurons in pharate adults (just prior to emergence) displayed properties similar to those in emerged adults. Accepted: 8 January 2000  相似文献   

17.
Body movements are mainly provided by mechanical function of skeletal muscle. Skeletal muscle is composed of numerous bundles of myofibers that are sheathed by intramuscular connective tissues. Each myofiber contains many myofibrils that run longitudinally along the length of the myofiber. Myofibrils are the contractile apparatus of muscle and they are composed of repeated contractile units known as sarcomeres. A sarcomere unit contains actin and myosin filaments that are spaced by the Z discs and titin protein. Mechanical function of skeletal muscle is defined by the contractile and passive properties of muscle. The contractile properties are used to characterize the amount of force generated during muscle contraction, time of force generation and time of muscle relaxation. Any factor that affects muscle contraction (such as interaction between actin and myosin filaments, homeostasis of calcium, ATP/ADP ratio, etc.) influences the contractile properties. The passive properties refer to the elastic and viscous properties (stiffness and viscosity) of the muscle in the absence of contraction. These properties are determined by the extracellular and the intracellular structural components (such as titin) and connective tissues (mainly collagen) 1-2. The contractile and passive properties are two inseparable aspects of muscle function. For example, elbow flexion is accomplished by contraction of muscles in the anterior compartment of the upper arm and passive stretch of muscles in the posterior compartment of the upper arm. To truly understand muscle function, both contractile and passive properties should be studied.The contractile and/or passive mechanical properties of muscle are often compromised in muscle diseases. A good example is Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a severe muscle wasting disease caused by dystrophin deficiency 3. Dystrophin is a cytoskeletal protein that stabilizes the muscle cell membrane (sarcolemma) during muscle contraction 4. In the absence of dystrophin, the sarcolemma is damaged by the shearing force generated during force transmission. This membrane tearing initiates a chain reaction which leads to muscle cell death and loss of contractile machinery. As a consequence, muscle force is reduced and dead myofibers are replaced by fibrotic tissues 5. This later change increases muscle stiffness 6. Accurate measurement of these changes provides important guide to evaluate disease progression and to determine therapeutic efficacy of novel gene/cell/pharmacological interventions. Here, we present two methods to evaluate both contractile and passive mechanical properties of the extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle and the contractile properties of the tibialis anterior (TA) muscle.  相似文献   

18.
Soundmyogram (SMG) and electromyogram signals were recorded simultaneously from the relatively fast medial gastrocnemius (MG) and slow soleus (SOL) during voluntary and electrically induced contractions. Using a spike-triggered averaging technique, the averaged elementary sound and corresponding MU spikes were also obtained from about 35 different MUs identified. The rms-SMG of MG increased as a function of force (P < 0.01). On the contrary, these values for SOL increased up to 60% MVC (P < 0.01), but decreased at 80% MVC. The relationship between the peak to peak amplitude of SMG and MU spike indicated significant positive correlations (r = 0.631 to approximately 0.657, P < 0.01). During electrical stimulation at 5 Hz, the SMG power spectral peak frequency (PF) was matched with stimulation frequency in both muscles. At higher stimulation frequencies, e.g., > 15 Hz, only in the MG was SMG-PF synchronized with stimulation frequency; the slow SOL did not show such synchronization. Our data suggest that the SMG frequency components might reflect active motor unit firing rates, and that the SMG amplitude depends upon mechanical properties of contraction, muscle fiber composition, and firing rate during voluntary and electrically induced contractions.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of prior movement on the force responses of skeletal muscle are compared with the effects of movement history on the changes in firing rate of muscle spindle receptors. Prior release results in the linearization of the mechanical properties of skeletal muscles, which can be provisionally explained by cross-bridge models of muscular contraction. The history-dependence of responses of muscle spindle receptors in unanesthetized decerebrate preparations appears to result from the kinetics of cycling and noncycling cross-bridges. The results of this comparison indicate that the integration of mechanical properties of muscle and spindle receptor promotes stiffness regulation.  相似文献   

20.
In centrarchid fishes, such as bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus, Rafinesque) and largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides, Lacepède), the contractile properties of feeding and swimming muscles show different scaling patterns. While the maximum shortening velocity (V(max)) and rate of relaxation from tetanus of swimming or myotomal muscle slow with growth, the feeding muscle shows distinctive scaling patterns. Cranial epaxial muscle, which is used to elevate the head during feeding strikes, retains fast contractile properties across a range of fish sizes in both species. In bass, the sternohyoideous muscle, which depresses the floor of the mouth during feeding strikes, shows faster contractile properties with growth. The objective of this study was to determine the molecular basis of these different scaling patterns. We examined the expression of two muscle proteins, myosin heavy chain (MyHC) and parvalbumin (PV), that affect contractile properties. We hypothesized that the relative contribution of slow and fast MyHC isoforms will modulate V(max) in these fishes, while the presence of PV in muscle will enhance rates of muscle relaxation. Myotomal muscle displays an increase in sMyHC expression with growth, in agreement with its physiological properties. Feeding muscles such as epaxial and sternohyoideus show no change or a decrease in sMyHC expression with growth, again as predicted from contractile properties. PV expression in myotomal muscle decreases with growth in both species, as has been seen in other fishes. The feeding muscles again show no change or an increase in PV expression with growth, contributing to faster contractile properties in these fishes. Both MyHC and PV appear to play important roles in modulating muscle contractile properties of swimming and feeding muscles in centrarchid fishes.  相似文献   

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